Historical Sources

Canonical Scripture

A Canonical Scripture

Daniel

Daniel 10; Daniel 12

Michael is named as a princely heavenly figure in relation to the people of God and sacred conflict under divine sovereignty.

Canonical Scripture

A Canonical Scripture

Jude and Revelation

Jude 1; Revelation 12

Later canonical witnesses preserve Michael in archangelic and heavenly conflict language.

Patristic / Medieval Tradition

D Patristic / Medieval / Kabbalistic Tradition

Christian angelological hierarchy

Pseudo-Dionysian hierarchy; medieval reception

Michael is commonly received among archangels in later Christian ordering, while his named scriptural role remains distinct from later system-building.

Tradition Notes

  • Traditionally associated with guardianship, divine order, courage, and defense of sacred order.
  • Michael's name functions theologically as a question that refuses every false claim to divine supremacy.

Traditional and Symbolic Functions

Traditional functions
Guardianship, Divine order, Courage, Defense of sacred order
Symbolic functions
Rightful boundary, Ordered courage, Reverence before sovereignty, Resistance to false supremacy
Tree of Life associations
Hod (Some later correspondence tables: Michael appears in some later tables in relation to Hod; other systems place him differently.)
Light imagery
Sapphire-gold, upright, clear, ordered.
Interpretive layer
The sapphire-gold imagery and symbolic polarity are interpretive synthesis, included for contemplative study and always secondary to scriptural witness.

Right Action Reflection

Establish a clean boundary. Speak truth without hatred. Remove disorder where it is within rightful responsibility.

Source References

  1. Daniel 10; Daniel 12
  2. Jude 1
  3. Revelation 12
  4. Pseudo-Dionysian hierarchy